Thanks, MLBPA and Marvin Miller: 50 years since first pro sports union contract

Executive Director Marvin Miller of the Major League Players Association talks to Philadelphia Phillies and Boston Red Sox before an exhibition game, March 19, 1977 in Clearwater, Florida. Miller was touring spring training camps. | AP

“I want you to understand that this is going to be an adversarial relationship. A union is not a social club. A union is a restraint on what an employer can otherwise do. If you expect the owners to like me, to praise me, to compliment me, you’ll be disappointed. In fact, if I’m elected and you find the owners telling you what a great guy I am, fire me! Don’t hesitate, because it can’t be that way if your director is doing his job. The owners loved Judge Cannon. Don’t make the same mistake with your new executive director.” – Marvin Miller

The year was 1965. Jackie Robinson had broken baseball’s color line 18 years prior in ’47, the Major League Baseball Players Association was only 12 years old, and the nation was still recovering from JFK’s assassination two years earlier.

Marvin Miller, the 48-year old mustachioed union man—chief economist—for the United Steel Workers of America, entered a Cleveland office, sat down, and came face to face with Robin Roberts (Phillies), Jim Bunning (Phillies), Harvey Kuenn (Cubs), and a few other members of the Players Association executive director screening committee on a chilly December day.

It was the job interview of a lifetime, and one of the hardest jobs to have in organized labor.

While in existence for 12 years, the MLBPA was powerless against the Major League bosses. They had held the reigns far too long, grown too comfortable with the system in place, and made sure nothing would change that.

At first, it didn’t even operate as a union, but rather as a loose coalition of players working together to earn a pension and benefits. Their first union “rep,” Robert “Judge” Cannon, a bona fide court judge who missed becoming MLB commissioner by one vote, was happy keeping the illusion of “labor peace” by towing the baseball bosses’ line.

This is how the Society for American Baseball remembers Cannon:

“When Cannon started meeting the players as he toured spring training camps, his message was simple: work with the owners. He constantly reminded the men how good they had it. He wanted the players to make no waves. Above all, the players should foster a greater relationship with the benevolent owners. In essence, Cannon was preaching to the players from the beginning, before he even met everyone and understood the demands and responsibilities entrusted to him. He never did grasp the industry from a player’s perspective.”

You repeat a lie enough times eventually it becomes truth. And for baseball players of that era, Cannon’s words caught them hook, line, and sinker.

Miller lays the groundwork

After months of traveling to spring training camp locations, meeting with players, coaches, and staff—and taking a lot of badmouthing from the press, owners, and managers, Miller was eventually elected as full-time executive director for the association.

Of the many headlines written about the players association’s search for a new director, the ones that stuck out to Miller: “Buck Rodgers Says, ‘We don’t want any labor boss,” and “‘Pro sports has no place for unions,’ says Joe Adcock.”

Rodgers was a catcher for the California Angels from 1961-69, while Adcock was first baseman for the Angels.

It’s hard to think of major league sports without strong players associations nowadays, but there we were.

“Though the people I would be representing were far better off than workers in any other union, representing them looked to be a tough job,” said Miller. “Players were not only ignorant about unions, they were positively hostile to the idea: They didn’t know what a union was, but they knew they didn’t want one. From the time immemorial, the baseball powers-that-be force-fed the players propaganda.”

Miller spent the next two years organizing players one-on-one, advocating on their behalf, working with each team’s player reps, listening to concerns, and learning from them. Going from big steel to professional sports was a huge leap, even for a lifelong baseball fan like Miller, who grew up rooting for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

The owners despised him and loathed the organizing wins. Instead, they fawned over those good ol’ days when they ran a “company union” in big league baseball.

History in the making

Those two years spent organizing on the road by Miller would pay off two-fold. By the time 1968 rolled around, players were “do or die” for the union, and that unity was untouchable by the bosse,s as the MLBPA negotiated and signed the first collective bargaining agreement in the history of professional sports.

That guaranteed two-year contract established a uniform contract league-wide, raised the minimum salary—in place for 20 years—from $6,000 to $10,000, and reduced pay cuts. More importantly, it put a stop to owners being able to make whatever changes they wanted and allowed players to finally take control of their workplace and work product. Their talents on the field made millions for the owners, and now the players demanded a say.

The first formal grievance procedure was introduced, spring training stipends went up, and players were able to finally recoup expenses.

Miller didn’t stop there, though.

During the lifetime of that first contract, he encouraged players to take direct action when needed—not signing contracts or showing up for spring training—in order to get increases for their pension fund following the revenue increases coming from the MLB television broadcast deal. It worked, too. Owners’ pension contributions went from $4.1 million per year to $5.45 million, with the time needed to qualify to receive the pension dropping from five years in the league to four.

By 1970, the players won a stronger grievance system, having independent arbitrators hear disputes instead of the MLB commissioner.

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CONTRIBUTOR

Al Neal is a sports columnist for People’s World writing on politics, labor relations, and the general rabble-rousing in professional sports. He spent a decade working in the trade union movement with various locals across the country and currently serves as Dir. of Education and Advocacy for the St. Louis Workers’ Education Society. A member of the Society of Professional Journalists, the National Sports Media Association, National Society for Newspaper Columnists and the NewsGuild, Neal’s work and reporting has been featured in the Labor-Tribune, Buzzfeed News, Russia Today (RT), Sputnik News Wire, and Getty Images. More words at GrandStand Central.